The correct answer is C. Maximize monthly dividend distributions through common stocks. The Investment Funds in Canada course stresses that suitability must reflect not only an investor’s knowledge level but also their risk-return profile. A risk-seeking investor is generally willing to accept higher volatility in pursuit of higher returns.
Common stocks, particularly dividend-paying equities, offer both income and capital appreciation potential, making them more appropriate for risk-seeking investors than guaranteed or fixed-income products. While such investments carry market risk, they align with a higher risk tolerance.
Option A is unsuitable because GICs are low-risk instruments designed for capital preservation, not risk-seeking investors. Option B is incorrect because investing in highly correlated assets increases, not reduces, portfolio risk. Option D contradicts CIFC diversification principles, which encourage combining asset classes to manage risk.
The CIFC text also notes that advisors should avoid over-complex products for clients with limited knowledge, but this does not mean avoiding growth-oriented investments altogether. Dividend-paying common stocks are widely understood, regulated, and suitable when properly diversified.
Therefore, Option C is the most appropriate and CIFC-verified recommendation.